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Apparently, some folks at JPMorgan were listening when Jamie Dimon threatened to fire anyone caught trading Bitcoin for "being stupid," because none other than Gandalf himself is out with a new note on cryptocurrencies and he doesn't paint a particularly flattering picture.

Apparently, some folks at JPMorgan were listening when Jamie Dimon threatened to fire anyone caught trading Bitcoin for "being stupid," because none other than Gandalf himself is out with a new note on cryptocurrencies and he doesn't paint a particularly flattering picture.

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Just as there are varying degrees among countries of restricting internet access, so there shall be varying degrees of crypto resistance among countries. In both cases, the more the resistance the worse off those countries end up.

Numero uno..Show some freaking guts and stop using “anonymous..” You might as well use “I am A Wimp..”.
Second..it’s irrelevant whether Bitcoin “becomes” a reserve..It is acting as one..and the powers that be will slam it..and all like it…

To make matters worse for Bitcoin, the Chinese central gov. has been telegraphing their intent to shut down Bitcoin for over a year now. Consequently, these actions should come as no surprise to anyone serious about Bitcoin’s future valuations. Last fall Bitcoin had 92% of it transactions in China. A couple of weeks ago that rate had fallen to less than 60%. There is far too much information available and observable affects here to doubt that the limiting of – if not shutting down of Bitcoin in China is not now the official Chinese government policy. The next shoe to fall probably will be the public announcement of Bitcoin miners or transactors prosecution in China. The only real question is how fast other developed economies will follow suit.

When you consider that private cryptocurrency has the same or greater economic threat as counterfeit currency to national economies and their central bank – gate keeper parasites, you can see why this is only the beginning of the global limiting private cryptocurrency. You should also examine the history of private currency’s in the US and around the world – in which national treasuries’ enforcement very consistently lead to all private currency’s – non-existence. Private cryptocurrency necessarily has the same future.

This doesn’t mean blockchain cryptocurrency transaction process technology applications are dead. The common mistake here is to confuse private cryptocurrency and blockchain technology – as being one unified entity. It is not. The non-proprietary uses of blockchain applications is flourishing and not just in financial applications. This all just means that blockchain technology will eventually be adopted by national economies, but not as private company based cryptocurrency like Bitcoin and others.

The more logical investment strategy here should be to research novel blockchain application developments that can be made proprietary and whose products are not threats to national economic interests. Numerous banks, credit card companies – even food companies (source tracing applications) are already working on blockchain applications for their systems and some have already applied for process patents (blockchain technology itself is public) for their uses.

My investment take is that all private cryptocurrencies will be extinct market artifacts with in a few years. Sure, their may be some dead-cat bounces in Bitcoin to trade/gamble on, but no private cryptocurrency that warrants investing in.

“Asshole..” that pretty ,much describes your half wit response…Crypto is only a “valid asset class” as long as the powers that be say so. What do YOU think China and other Nation States will do when a Crypto Currency threatens them????

Read again, it’s the opinion of the celebrated trader Kyle Bass, not mine. I don’t always agree with Kyle, he’s been wrong before (who hasn’t?), but I’ve never heard anyone call Kyle a “half wit” until a half wit like you.

Before dismissing his response as a half-wit, maybe you should first listen to his argument about why it’s a valid asset class? Then constructively criticize it if you’re still unpersuaded.

Thousands of years of history shows that nation states come and go. Ultimately they have repeatedly failed to ban or control except temporarily. Someone already mentioned drugs for example. So perhaps the issue isn’t what gov’t may try to do (and ultimately fail as usual), but rather whether crypto has any genuine value?

To make matters worse for Bitcoin, the Chinese central gov. has been telegraphing their intent to shut down Bitcoin for over a year now. Consequently, these actions should come as no surprise to anyone serious about Bitcoin’s future valuations. Last fall Bitcoin had 92% of it transactions in China. A couple of weeks ago that rate had fallen to less than 60%. There is far too much information available and observable affects here to doubt that the limiting of – if not shutting down of Bitcoin in China is not now the official Chinese government policy. The next shoe to fall probably will be the public announcement of Bitcoin miners or transactors prosecution in China. The only real question is how fast other developed economies will follow suit.

When you consider that private cryptocurrency has the same or greater economic threat as counterfeit currency to national economies and their central bank – gate keeper parasites, you can see why this is only the beginning of the global limiting private cryptocurrency. You should also examine the history of private currency’s in the US and around the world – in which national treasuries’ enforcement very consistently lead to all private currency’s – non-existence. Private cryptocurrency necessarily has the same future.

This doesn’t mean blockchain cryptocurrency transaction process technology applications are dead. The common mistake here is to confuse private cryptocurrency and blockchain technology – as being one unified entity. It is not. The non-proprietary uses of blockchain applications is flourishing and not just in financial applications. This all just means that blockchain technology will eventually be adopted by national economies, but not as private company based cryptocurrency like Bitcoin and others.

The more logical investment strategy here should be to research novel blockchain application developments that can be made proprietary and whose products are not threats to national economic interests. Numerous banks, credit card companies – even food companies (source tracing applications) are already working on blockchain applications for their systems and some have already applied for process patents (blockchain technology itself is public) for their uses.

My personal investment take is that all private cryptocurrencies will be extinct market artifacts with in a few years – if not sooner. Sure, their may be some dead-cat bounces in Bitcoin to trade/gamble on, but no private cryptocurrency that warrants investing in.

By this loose definition… an IPO of a stock that doesn’t pay dividends is a pyramid scheme. I mean you just started a company and now you think you can ask people to buy shares of it? What kind of scam is this? You start with all the shares?! Scam!!

What makes an IPO a valid investment and Bernie Madoff’s structure a Pyramid scheme is that one presents a real ongoing utility which has value and the other is just a way to rob people under the guise of an investment. What makes it not a scam is that there is utility. If blockchain has no utility at all then yes it is a scam but if it has utility then it is not.

I have not seen any valid arguments that Bitcoin provides no utility. The fact governments may ban it regardless of utility is no more relevant than calling investment in tobacco companies a scam because governments might outright ban tobacco. Yes, both are possible and when you invest you run that risk but that doesn’t make it a scam.

According to Charlie Shrem, JPM has had an internal “Blockchain Working Group” for over two years

JPM has built its own blockchain platform on Ethereum. The bank has even filed a patent for its own crypto.

So while Dimon is going all Alec Baldwin on BTC, JPM is actually full-throttle on blockchain…LOL

As I said before, Dimon’s public meltdown reeks of fear and desperation. As he should be. Banks are just middlemen between the suppliers and consumers of capital. BTC and blockchain technology have the potential to largely diminish our need for banks. Methinks Dimon is actually shakin in his boots and disingenuously dissing the competitive coin.

yeah but the problem is, Dimon and China have together sent Bitcoin down by 27% in 5 days. so you know, you can say they’re scared all you want, but the people who should be scared are the people holding Bitcoin who are subject to these tape bombs that send the damn thing tumbling.

You are confusing the issue of volatility with the issue of viability. BTC is indeed volatile but nevertheless viable. In contrast, JPM is neither volatile nor viable. Wait to see which gets the last laugh in the long run.